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Tuesday, February 5, 1974
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Cc.T:p"rd by Tcm Cawysr
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Ersl Krogh Giicpsnclocl from law
CLVr'"L YSssh. - This Washington State Supreme Court Monday tuipendsd
C;"l "j d" StrC'Sh, Jr., who b$ssn a fix-month sentence Monday, from tha practice cf
Th2 csurt order tinned by Chief Justice Frank Hsla esld Krogh a former dsputy
c;:::t:,r.t tzr dsntsst'c ella'rs to President Nixon Is cur-sndsd until tnz
C:zzl'Aza cf CizlzV.inzry proceedings tssinst h!m by tha state bar esseclstion. Ha
t si d tha court mada its data rminatlon on tha basis of a judgement entared by tha U.S.
District Court In Washington, D.C.
Wador'o raielors zero in on Czar
WACHIHGTON Consumer cdvocata Ralph fiadar said Monday he would make
en !nvasJss3on cf tha Federal Energy Office "to see how much influence" the oil
Industry exsrts cn tha sney.
Cnsrgy Chlsf V.I'.IIam E. Simon said he would welcome "Nader's raiders."
"V.'a will be plsasad to receive tha advice and observation of Mr. fiadar's office and
cthsr crcnlnt'ons that hava comments which w'il help us deal with tha energy
crisis In an equitable manner," Simon said when informed of Nader's announcement.
in A bomb blasts British bus
OATLEY, England A bomb ripped apart a bus packed with Critish troops, their
wives and children Monday returning from weekend holidays. Army officials blamed
tha blast on the Provisional wing of tha Irish Republican Army (IRA).
Tha Defense Ministry said tha explosion killed at least 11 persons.
Tha blast tore through tha bus shortly before 2 a.m. as it sped along an expressway
taking army and sir force men and their families back to Yorkshire bases in northern
England after weekend outings. '
Troop withdrawals continue in Suez
Israel completed tha second stage cf its withdrawal from tha West Bank of the
Suez Canal Monday, yielding a 112-square-mile horizontal strip north cf the Cairo
Suez highway.
On the Golan Heights ceasefire lines, Syria and Israel clashed for the ninth straight
day.
Diplomatic reports in London said, however, that Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger may go back to tha Middle East later this month amid indications of a
Syrian willingness to carry out troop disengagement with Israel despite a militant
public posture.
Conservation may cost more
CHARLOTTE Duke Power
Customers who have been answering pleas
to conserve energy may see their efforts
resift ffV higher electricity bills. 1 ; .1
The reason for the request, the company
said, is that conservation has caused demand
for power to fall while its costs stay the same.
Steve Griffith, Associate Counsel for
Duke Power Co., said the additional
increase proposal would be "based on
budget figures for 1974 and any changes that
may occur in these figures as a result of
decline in sale.
Customer demand for Duke's electricity
was about five per cent lower last month
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wires of United Press Intsrnauorial
than the previous January, because of warm
winter weather and conservation.
Other, utilities have announced plans to,,,
seek increases to compensate for drops in.:'
business caused by conservation.
In December, Public Service Gas Co. of'
Gastonia applied for a rate increase to offset
the 15 per cent cutback in natural gas
consumption ordered by the State utilities
commission. The company withdrew that
request after the commission decided against
the cutback.
The North Carolina Utilities Commission
has given permission to Duke and South
Carolina Electric and Gas to pass on rising
coal costs to the consumer.
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SiLX MOHAIX SUIT . .59.00
WOOL-WCXSTED SUIT 59.00
SilX-WOCL SUIT - 59.00
DACXON-WOOL SUIT 59.00
SPCXT JACKETS 4 9. CO
SK3IT (Menogrammad) 8. CO
DOUSLE KNIT SUITS 55.00
CASHMEICi TOPCOATS 69.00
AIm Ladl Suits wd Dthmi
' 'MR. DILL DAM I
(Matter Tailor)
UNIVERSITY MOTEL
942-4132
Tuesday & Wed.; Feb. 6 & 6
Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
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WASHINGTON Teamster President
Frank E. Fitzsimmons Friday threw the
weight of his giant union against the'strike by
independent truckers and urged state
governments to start cracking down on the
strikers.
He predicted the strikers would not be
appeased by government concessions on
freight rates and said a militant minority
"thirsts for total victory at the expense of
everyone else."
Nix ou
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WAS HI NGTON Digging in for a fight.
President Nixon Monday sent Congress a
record $304.4 billion deficit budget he said
could avert recession, curb unemployment
and fight inflation at the same time.
Democrats began denouncing it at once as
fat and inflationary.
Nixon conceded it was not very popular
with Congress and said he would need
cooperation to keep its $9.4 billion deficit
frm moving even higher in the face of
economic uncertainty."
Minutes after the $304.4 billion budget
was made public. Sen. Frank Church, D
Idaho, and Rep. H.R. Gross. R-Iowa,
Nixom ireffimtes Deaini
WASHINGTON The White House
said Monday that tapes and evidence "do not
support" John W. Dean's sworn testimony
linking President Nixon to the Watergate
bugging cover-up.
Nixon's chief Watergate lawyer, James D.
St. Clair, said what the evidence does
support is the truth of the President's
repeated statements that he knew nothing of
the plot to hush up the scandal until last
March 21.
But the White House gave no indication if
evidence bolstering Nixon's version would
be made public or whether the President
would honor special Watergate prosecutor
Leon Jaworski's still outstanding requests
for more documents and tapes to aid his
investigation.
St. Clair's statement, issued at a White
House press briefing, came less than 24
hours after Jaworski said in a nationwide
television interview that prosecutors "are
aware of no basis for a perjury charge"
against Dean, the former White House
counsel.
"I have noted that the special prosecutor
and members of his staff have seen fit to
discuss in public their views regarding John
Dean's veracity," St. Clair said.
"I can say categorically however, that the
I The Man Who
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More National Guard troops joined police
Monday to help stem violence in the strike
by independent truckers that spread across
almost the entire country, throwing
thousands of workers out of jobs and drying
up food supplies.
With more than 4,000 Guardsmen already
patrolling highways in Pennsylvania and
Ohio, Michigan Gov. William G. Mil'iken
Monday ordered all that state's Guard
helicopters into the air over major truck ,
cs recof
introduced resolutions which would kill the
-7.5 per cent increase, the first pay increase
for the government's top employes since
1969.
We must apply the knife . . . the first cut
should be in the new pay raises," Church
said, noting it would mean a $34 million
saving.
Rep. James O'Hara, D-Mich., said at a
time when the American wage earners are
being restricted to pay increases of not more
than 5.5 per cent, it is unthinkable for the
President to propose increases for high
officials that exceed the guidelines being
imposed on everyone else."
tapes and other evidence furnished to the
special prosecutor at least as far as the
President is concerned do not support
statements before the Senate Select
Watergate Committee made by Mr. Dean as
to what the President knew about the cover
up and especially when he knew it. The
evidence does support what the President
has said on this matter."
Nixon ordered
LOS ANGELES A Superior Court
judge Monday signed a precedent-setting
subpoena ordering President Nixon to
testify at the burglary trial of former
presidential aide John Ehrlichman. The
White House already has indicated Nixon
would "respectfully decline" to appear and
Attorney General William Saxbe said he
would fight the subpoena on grounds it
would set a bad precedent.
Judge Gordon Ringer said last week he
would issue the subpoena because he was
persuaded that Nixon was a material witness
for the trial of Ehrlichman and two other
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Will Be Honored
routes to help beef up police protection for
drivers daring to run a gauntlet of violence.
"This is a problem that extends beyond
our borders." Milliken said. "But we are
taking all necessary steps to prevent violence
and intimidation within our borders."
Police across the country worked
overtime trying to stop what U.S. Attorney
General William Saxbe said was violence by
some truckers to "bring the country to its
knees."
But Assistant Senate Republican Leader
Robert P. Griffin, noting that the cost of
living has increased 25 per cent since 1969.
said if Congress "does not have the political
courage" to vote itself a pay boost, it should
do so for the executive and judiciary so they
can attract and keep top talent.
The proposed pay increase will be killed if
either the Senate or House votes a resolution
of disapproval within 30 days.
Strike vote
LONDON Britain's 269,000
mineworkers voted by a landslide 8 1 percent
for a national mines shutdown, their union
announced Monday. Union leaders
predicted it will start Sunday and Energy
Minister Patrick Jenkin called the vote "a
tragedy."
The vote meant escalating a 12 weeks-old
slowdown, which already has depleted
supplies, into a national walkout. Prime
Minister Edward Heath has said this would
mean economic disaster.
"It really is a tragedy that this offer, which
most people see as fair, has not been
to testify
former White House aides on charges they
gave the orders that led to the break-in of
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's offices.
It was the first state court subpoena ever
for a President and only the third by any
court in the history of the country. No
President has ever been compelled by
subpoena to give personal testimony.
The subpoena was granted to attorneys
for Ehrlichman. Trial for Ehrlichman, G.
Gordon Liddy and David Young is set for
April 15.
UNIVERSITY
OPTICIANS
DON REGISTER & STAFF
Reg. Licensed Opticians
Prescriptions Filled,
Lenses Duplicated
CONTACT LENSES FITTED
942-8711
New And Larger Quarters In University Square!
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JAW. 28-FEB. 15
Pick up your proofs end
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Operators who kept trucking ran the risk
of being hit by snipers bullets, rocks and
other missiles in almost every state.
Hundreds of shooting incidents were
reported nationwide, and police said it was a
"miracle" that more drivers were not injured.
There has been one death so far and several
dozen injuries, most of them minor.
In Baltimore, Md., four men were arrested
w ith a 12-gauge shotgun and three Molotov
cocktails after a trucking company told
police it received a telephoned threat that it
would be firebombed if any vehicles were
operated.
Several states, such as Michigan. Illinois
and Ohio provided state police patrol cars to
ride "shotgun" for convoys of trucks
carrying vital supplies.
The impact of the strike by truckers on the
nation's industrial and agricultural supply
lines was pushing up factory closings.
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shaff said
50,000 workers had already been laid off
because of plant shutdowns, and the figure
could grow to 400.000 if the strike goes on
much longer.
passes
accepted," Jenkin said.
He was referring to a 16.5 per cent pay
offer by the state-run National Coal Board
which would bring basic pay of men working
at coal face from $83.61 weekly to S90.52
weekly and for lowest paid surface workers
from $58.16 to $63.45 weekly. The
mineworkers demanded 30-35 per cent.
Heath met leaders of the 10 million
member Trades Union Congress ( I UC). the
equivalent of the AFL-CIO, for one more
peace bid.
Officials said he sought TUC intervention
with mineworkers leaders at least to defer the
walkout while they discuss setting up an
independent board or commission to take a
new look at the mineworkers' claims.
But political informants said the moment
of truth is fast approaching when Heath
must decide between a humiliating
climbdown or an appeal for a new mandate
in a general election.
The mineworkers union served notice last
week if more than 55 per cent voted for a
walkout in a ballot held Tuesday and Friday
it would step up the slowdown into a full
national coal strike.
The slowdown already has slashed coal
production 30 per cent. Coupled with the
Arab oil cutback it forced the government to
put industry on a three-day week.
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Mr. HI
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UNIVERSITY SQUARE
The Howard Roberts Chorale
Featuring
o Miss Ella Mitchell
Tonight
Tuesday Feb. 5
Memorial Hall
8 p.m.
Reserved Seats $2.00
Available at Union Desk
& at the Door
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